Felix Brissot de Warville (aka Félix-Saturnin Brissot de Warville) (1818–92)
“Un Attelage de
Boeufs en Normandie” [a team of oxen in Normandy], printed and published by Alfred
Cadart (1828–75) as plate 210 in “L'Illustration Nouvelle par une Société de Peintres-Graveurs
à L’Eau-Forte”, Vol. 5, September issue, 1873 (see http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b85276003)
.
Etching on
thick wove paper with margins as published
Size: (sheet) 31.9
x 41.7 cm; (plate) 23.9 x 31.8 cm; (image) 17.2 x 25.2 cm
Inscribed in
the plate with the artist’s signature and lettered below the image borderline:
(left) “F. Brissot, del. et. sculp.”; (centre) “UN ATTELAGE DE BOEUFS EN
NORMANDIE”; (right) “A. CADART, Edit. Imp. Rue Nve des Mathurins, 58, Paris.”
Condition: richly
inked and well-printed impression in near pristine condition.
I am selling
this strongly romantic original etching of rural life for AU$175 (currently US$127.01/EUR114.08/GBP87.86
at the time of posting this print) including postage and handling to anywhere
in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this rare etching executed by one of the leading
animalier artists of 19th century France, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
Quite often the
quality of an artist can be determined by how they render incidental details,
such as the long grass at the side of the road shown in the lower-left corner
of this image.
For me, a good artist is one who can convincingly suggest a
plethora of detail without actually showing the detail in all its intricacy. The
reason that this particular virtue is so important is that by reducing the
amount of pictorial information that a viewer has to visually digest, the critical
features of the composition stand out.
Felix Brissot
de Warville mastered this art of guiding a viewer to the important parts of the
image by effectively blurring unnecessary details. Interestingly, he
mastered this technique by following in the metaphorical footsteps of his
artistic mentor, Adolphe Martial-Potémont. For those who might be interested in
revisiting the forest scene by Martial-Potémont that I posted not long ago, please
have a look at his treatment of the undergrowth as it epitomises the artistic
approach of rationalising what is shown and what is not.
To understand
how Brissot de Warville employs the approach of selective detailing, note how
the artist makes the legs of the driver of the team of oxen seem almost
invisible so that attention is directed along his cane and towards the leading pair
of oxen.
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